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  1. May 24, 2017 · Rebecca Beatrice Brooks May 24, 2017 9 Comments. The Great Puritan Migration was a period in the 17th century during which English puritans migrated to New England, the Chesapeake and the West Indies. English migration to Massachusetts consisted of a few hundred pilgrims who went to Plymouth Colony in the 1620s and between 13,000 and 21,000 ...

  2. Most of the Puritans settled in the New England area. As they immigrated and formed individual colonies, their numbers rose from 17,800 in 1640 to 106,000 in 1700. Religious exclusiveness was the foremost principle of their society.

  3. Aug 3, 2023 · The Massachusetts Bay Colony was founded in 1628 by members of the Massachusetts Bay Company, a joint-stock trading company chartered by the English crown. The company was composed of Puritans who wanted to pursue religious freedom in the New World. The first governor of this group of Puritans was John Winthrop who proclaimed the new colony ...

  4. Mar 22, 2014 · So thousands of Puritans sailed to New England between 1620 and 1640. Puritan Fun, Sort Of. Thomas Morton went to his grief breaking Puritan rules. A free-thinking entrepreneur, he set up a trading post in the future Quincy, Mass. He called his little settlement “Merrymount.” He horrified his neighbors in Plymouth by consorting with native ...

  5. Nov 22, 2020 · Which, gradually he, and his son Charles I, did. Royal and ecclesiastical persecution led to what has been called The Great Migration, which saw some 20,000 Puritans leave England for New England between 1620 and 1640. Most of them landed in Massachusetts. Did they come seeking religious freedom? For themselves, yes.

  6. Apr 16, 2022 · The “Puritans” and “Separatist” settled in Boston and Plymouth. They were the progressives of their day,so to speak. In London most of the founders of the Royal Society (science) were puritans. They were also known as Congregationalists and today The United Church of Christ – the church Obama was a member for 20 years.

  7. Irish American and other white ethnic groups also left Dorchester during these years, but did so more slowly because of ties to local Catholic parishes that could not relocate. By the time new waves of immigrants began to call Boston home in the 1960s and 1970s, many former Jewish neighborhoods in Dorchester were now predominantly Black.

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